The face of collecting is changing. And it is not pretty.
Collectors are angry and demanding rare coins as if they are entitled to them.
Coin World
magazine just reported a sellout of the newest American Eagles – a Congratulations Set (whatever!) that
contains a proof 2017-S piece. Nearly 75,000 sets were sold in about 120
seconds.
And collectors are MAD! They want rare coins, and they
expect to get one on the cheap. Or two. Or three. But most of them said that they just
wanted one. Yea, right!
Big shiny coins, fresh from the press – what’s the big deal,
why are they crying?
All American Coin: Including the part about exclusive access. My advice: Go out and collect something fun. And collect on your own terms -- be creative. |
The rare Eagles look like all the other Eagles (except
for the tiny S mintmark). But, that S doesn’t have a story to tell. In this case, it is
just an S.
So why are they crying? They are crying because they are hoodwinked into thinking
that coin collecting is about buying low and selling high.
They are crying because they have been brainwashed into thinking
that coin collecting is about having one from each mint. (Yes, you read that
correctly, old Mister Heaton did us a disservice). Set collecting according to a formula is boring -- particularly in the modern age. And, P-D-S-W collecting is boring on
ahistoric Eagles.
Now, there is nothing wrong with Eagles. They are pretty enough. Shiny. Big and heavy. All American.
Now, there is nothing wrong with Eagles. They are pretty enough. Shiny. Big and heavy. All American.
But let’s be real, collecting American Eagles is a bit like painting
by the numbers. And, there is nothing wrong with that either ... except when people get MAD.
Collecting new US Mint Products is like playing the lottery. Except that folks get MAD when
they don’t win. They demand fairness. “I work
hard.” “I have been collecting for
years.” “I’m a true collector.”
“I help the elderly cross busy
streets.” This is what they say.
But not everyone gets to have a rare coin – as least not at
the issue price. Isn’t this what defines a rare coin? Besides, $200 on EBay is
not so bad.
I suppose the US Mint could have put household ordering
limits on the Congratulations Set.
But, folks would still complain (because everyone is a dealer in these
circumstances -- some would have bought two or three or more in order to make a profit). Coin Hogs.